
Greg Beitel
· ProfessorVerifiedNorthwestern University · Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Active 1990–2024
About
Professor Greg Beitel leads the Beitel Laboratory within the Molecular Biosciences department at Northwestern University. His lab focuses on understanding how cells create complex three-dimensional organs by coordinately regulating their shapes with other cells. The primary model system used in his research is the Drosophila tracheal system, which serves as a genetically accessible model for organs such as the kidney, vascular system, and lung that are composed of tubular epithelial structures. Despite the critical importance of these organs, the fundamental molecular mechanisms underlying tubulogenesis and tube-size control remain poorly understood. Furthermore, there are currently no treatments for devastating diseases such as Polycystic Kidney Disease (PKD) that affect tube architecture. To address these challenges, Professor Beitel's lab employs genetic, molecular, cell biological, and biochemical approaches to investigate how the sizes of tracheal tubes are controlled. Additionally, his research probes the roles of vertebrate homologs of tracheal morphogenesis genes, aiming to shed light on conserved mechanisms of organ development and disease.
Research topics
- Biology
- Genetics
- Immunology
- Cell biology
- Computational biology
- Medicine
- Virology
- Internal medicine
Selected publications
JCI Insight · 2024-01-16 · 9 citations
articleOpen accessHypercapnia, elevation of the partial pressure of CO2 in blood and tissues, is a risk factor for mortality in patients with severe acute and chronic lung diseases. We previously showed that hypercapnia inhibits multiple macrophage and neutrophil antimicrobial functions and that elevated CO2 increases the mortality of bacterial and viral pneumonia in mice. Here, we show that normoxic hypercapnia downregulates innate immune and antiviral gene programs in alveolar macrophages (AMØs). We also show that zinc finger homeobox 3 (Zfhx3) - a mammalian ortholog of zfh2, which mediates hypercapnic immune suppression in Drosophila - is expressed in mouse and human macrophages. Deletion of Zfhx3 in the myeloid lineage blocked the suppressive effect of hypercapnia on immune gene expression in AMØs and decreased viral replication, inflammatory lung injury, and mortality in hypercapnic mice infected with influenza A virus. To our knowledge, our results establish Zfhx3 as the first known mammalian mediator of CO2 effects on immune gene expression and lay the basis for future studies to identify therapeutic targets to interrupt hypercapnic immunosuppression in patients with advanced lung disease.
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) · 2023-03-01 · 2 citations
preprintOpen accessSummary Hypercapnia, elevation of the partial pressure of CO 2 in blood and tissues, is a risk factor for mortality in patients with severe acute and chronic lung diseases. We previously showed that hypercapnia inhibits multiple macrophage and neutrophil antimicrobial functions, and that elevated CO 2 increases the mortality of bacterial and viral pneumonia in mice. Here, we show that normoxic hypercapnia downregulates innate immune and antiviral gene programs in alveolar macrophages (AMØs). We also show that zinc finger homeobox 3 (Zfhx3), mammalian ortholog of zfh2, which mediates hypercapnic immune suppression in Drosophila , is expressed in mouse and human MØs. Deletion of Zfhx3 in the myeloid lineage blocked the suppressive effect of hypercapnia on immune gene expression in AMØs and decreased viral replication, inflammatory lung injury and mortality in hypercapnic mice infected with influenza A virus. Our results establish Zfhx3 as the first known mammalian mediator of CO 2 effects on immune gene expression and lay the basis for future studies to identify therapeutic targets to interrupt hypercapnic immunosuppression in patients with advanced lung diseases. Graphical abstract
2021-10-13
peer-reviewOpen access1st authorCorrespondingThe Drosophila extracellular matrix protein Dumpy (Dpy) is one of the largest proteins encoded by any animal.One class of dpy mutations produces a characteristic shortening of the wing blade known as oblique (dpy o ), due to altered tension in the developing wing.We describe here the characterization of docked (doc), a gene originally named because of an allele producing a truncated wing.We show that doc corresponds to the gene model CG5484, which encodes a homolog of the yeast protein Yif1 and plays a key role in ER to Golgi vesicle transport.Genetic analysis is consistent with a similar role for Doc in vesicle trafficking: docked alleles interact not only with genes encoding the COPII core proteins sec23 and sec13, but also with the SNARE proteins synaptobrevin and syntaxin.Further, we demonstrate that the strong similarity between the doc 1 and dpy o wing phenotypes reflects a functional connection between the two genes; we found that various dpy alleles are sensitive to changes in dosage of genes encoding other vesicle transport components such as sec13 and sar1.Doc's effects on trafficking are not limited to Dpy; for example, reduced doc dosage disturbed Notch pathway signaling during wing blade and vein development.These results suggest a model in which the oblique wing phenotype in doc 1 results from reduced transport of wild-type Dumpy protein; by extension, an additional implication is that the dpy o alleles can themselves be explained as hypomorphs.
Organ remodeling: The molecular choreography of a dance of destruction
Current Biology · 2021-12-01 · 1 citations
letterOpen access1st authorCorrespondingFigshare · 2021-01-01
datasetOpen accessMouse microarray data
Figshare · 2021-01-01
datasetOpen accessHuman microarray data
2021-05-17
peer-reviewOpen accessInterface Focus · 2021 · 14 citations
- Immunology
- Biology
- Cell biology
-induced changes in macrophage gene expression help explain hypercapnic suppression of antibacterial and antiviral host defence in mice and reveal a mechanism that may underlie, at least in part, the high mortality of patients with severe lung disease and hypercapnia.
2020-05-29
peer-reviewOpen accessSenior author2020-05-01
articleOpen access
Recent grants
NIH · $1.3M · 2010
Tube size control by Src and Yorkie/YAP
NIH · $1.2M · 2014–2019
Genes Mediating Innate Immune Suppression by Hypercapnia in Mammals and Flies
NIH · $1.5M · 2011–2016
Frequent coauthors
- 26 shared
Peter H. S. Sporn
Northwestern University
- 12 shared
Aisha Nair
Northwestern University
- 12 shared
Sarah Paul
All India Institute of Medical Sciences
- 11 shared
S. Marina Casalino‐Matsuda
Northwestern University
- 10 shared
Jacob I. Sznajder
Northwestern University
- 10 shared
H. Robert Horvitz
McGovern Institute for Brain Research
- 9 shared
G. R. Scott Budinger
Northwestern University
- 8 shared
Khalilah L. Gates
Northwestern University
Education
- 1994
Ph.D.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Awards & honors
- Helen Hay Whitney Postdoctoral Fellowship
- Burroughs Wellcome Career Development Award
- NSF CAREER Award
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